Howard Hills, who wrote a Guest Contribution about e-learning for public library staff earlier this month, asked me to include this item.
"The Skills for Business Network work based e-learning project (based at e-skills UK) is conducting a major study to understand why UK employers are currently investing in e-learning and the difference it is making to their business and staff. This will give participating employers a unique insight into workforce preferences and what learners really think.
The study investigates why organisations are investing in e-learning (which is defined broadly as the application of technology throughout the learning process) and what their successes and challenges have been.
UK employers of any size who are already investing in e-learning programmes at work are invited to take part in a short anonymous, online survey.
In stage 2 of the research, there is an opportunity to take part in a simple analysis of employee’s attitudes and responses to e-learning which is a unique chance for you to gather important internal feedback as well as contribute to the overall debate. Places for stage 2 are limited and we would encourage you to register your interest as soon as possible.
Full details of the research are available from e-skills UK. The final report will be launched at Learning Technologies Conference in January 2007."
im+m e-Library - by Jim Farmer and Jon Allen. Worth subscribing to its RSS feed.
instructional media + magic, inc. a.k.a. im+m"develops standards-based multimedia courseware for colleges and universities, and the supporting information technology infrastructure. Based on research from early initiatives, im+m developed multimedia-rich classroom presentations and on-line courses leading to the improvement of student retention and performance".
im+m hosts a rapidly expanding, regularly updated, and authoritative e-library, complete with RSS feed. im+m describes the e-library as being:
Currently, the e-library is particularly strong on North American material relating to the patenting of educational software. What is especially useful about it is its inclusion of blog posts, material from state agency web sites etc, all rendered as PDF files and stored by im+m, irrespective of their source. So this is a proper library, rather than just a library of potentially volatile hyperlinks.
Posted on 22/08/2006 in News and comment | Permalink | Comments (0)
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